Bibtex
Cite as text
@Inbook{Arfaiee+Winkler+Tilebein,
Cite-key = "Tilebein2023WGAB",
Year= "2023",
Volume= "Schriftenreihe der Wissenschaftlichen Gesellschaft für Arbeits- und Betriebsorganisation (WGAB) e. V.",
Pages= "95-114",
Journal = "WGAB",
Title= "Smart, Sustainable and Socially Valuable: How Digital Textile Microfactories can Contribute to a Brighter Future",
Author= "Pouria Arfaiee (1), Marcus Winkler (2), Meike Tilebein (1,2 ); (1) Institute for Diversity Studies in Engineering, University of Stuttgart; (2) Center of Management Research, German Institutes of Textile and Fiber Research Denkendorf",
Doi= "https://doi.org/10.30844/wgab_2023_6",
Abstract= "The textile and clothing industry (TCI) is facing a number of challenges due to current global trends such as the progressive individualization of customer wishes, increase in product variants and decrease in lot sizes which require highly flexible value chains. Here, digital networking across the entire value chain offers great potential for innovation. By establishing flexible production systems focusing on decentralized manufacturing as well as on-demand products, the TCI can shape new concepts that contribute to sustainability and even add to social value. In order to promote such flexible production systems, Microfactories have recently been subject to research and development which offer new possibilities for the TCI in the form of Digital Textile Microfactories. This paper presents recent digitally-driven technologies for Microfactories in the TCI, with a focus on 3D knitting as well as digital textile printing, and aims to answer the question of how such Microfactories can contribute to a brighter future through analysing their potential impact on sustainability aspects as well as adding to social value.",
Keywords= "textile industry, digitalization, microfactory, digital printing, 3D knitting, sustainability, social value",
}
Pouria Arfaiee (1), Marcus Winkler (2), Meike Tilebein (1,2 ); (1) Institute for Diversity Studies in Engineering, University of Stuttgart; (2) Center of Management Research, German Institutes of Textile and Fiber Research Denkendorf(2023): Smart, Sustainable and Socially Valuable: How Digital Textile Microfactories can Contribute to a Brighter Future. Schriftenreihe der Wissenschaftlichen Gesellschaft für Arbeits- und Betriebsorganisation (WGAB) e. V.(2023), S. 95-114. Online: https://doi.org/10.30844/wgab_2023_6 (Abgerufen 20.12.24)
Open Access
The textile and clothing industry (TCI) is facing a number of challenges due to current global trends such as the progressive individualization of customer wishes, increase in product variants and decrease in lot sizes which require highly flexible value chains. Here, digital networking across the entire value chain offers great potential for innovation. By establishing flexible production systems focusing on decentralized manufacturing as well as on-demand products, the TCI can shape new concepts that contribute to sustainability and even add to social value. In order to promote such flexible production systems, Microfactories have recently been subject to research and development which offer new possibilities for the TCI in the form of Digital Textile Microfactories. This paper presents recent digitally-driven technologies for Microfactories in the TCI, with a focus on 3D knitting as well as digital textile printing, and aims to answer the question of how such Microfactories can contribute to a brighter future through analysing their potential impact on sustainability aspects as well as adding to social value.
textile industry, digitalization, microfactory, digital printing, 3D knitting, sustainability, social value